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The October report found that around 13% of Americans reported economic hardship over the prior year due to climate change. Climate change could cost Americans born in 2024 nearly $500,000, due to higher taxes and pricier housing and food, among many other factors, ICF, a consulting firm, recently found in a report commissioned by Consumer Reports. Stan Honda | AFP | Getty ImagesOther health effects of climate change reflect more widespread shifts in global conditions. "There are clear interactions between heat waves and health conditions," said Charles Driscoll, a professor at Syracuse University who studies climate change. Climate change leads to droughts, which lead to crop failures, which cause food price spikes.
Persons: Chandan Khanna, Andrew Rumbach, Eva Marie Uzcategui, Wagner, Rumbach, Stan Honda, Charles Driscoll, Driscoll, Ringo H.W, Chiu, Mark Kantrowitz, Gernot Wagner Organizations: AFP, Getty, U.S . Department of, Treasury, Consumer Reports, Urban Institute, Bloomberg, U.S . Census, Insurance, Swiss Re Institute, Health, Natural Resources Defense, Syracuse University, International Labour Organization, Kaiser Family Foundation, of Labor Statistics, Columbia Business Locations: Fort Lauderdale , Florida, U.S, Fort Myers Beach , Florida, Florida , Louisiana, California, Hurricane, Queens, New York, Malibu, Malibu , Calif
Some climate activists accuse the industry of simply investing in carbon capture as way to extend the use of oil and gas. The technology typically uses chemical absorption to capture carbon dioxide emitted from the chimney of an industrial plant. "The economic viability of carbon capture and sequestration is a challenge today because the cost of building most plants in order to capture carbon dioxide are very significant," the executive said. About two-thirds of the industry's carbon dioxide emissions come from chemical reactions that occur when breaking down limestone. SLB this month announced a nearly $400 million investment in Aker Carbon Capture, a pure-play carbon capture company based in Norway, in an effort to accelerate deployment of the technology at commercial scale.
Persons: Chin Lee, Biden, SLB, Fred Majkut, Majkut, Adam Miklos, Miklos, Baker Hughes, Olivier Le Peuch, Alessandro Bresciani, Jeff Gustavson, Gustavson, steelmaker Nucor, Linde, Dan Ammann, Ammann, Fatih Birol, We're, SLB's Majkut Organizations: Chevron, Houston Chronicle, Hearst Newspapers, Department of Energy, RTI International, International Energy Agency, Exxon, Rystad Energy, Clean Investment Monitor, United Nations ., Gulf Coast, CF Industries, Talos Energy, Carbonvert, IEA Locations: Winnie, Mississippi, Vicksburg, Schlumberger, United States, Paris, Chevron, United Kingdom, U.S, Aker, Norway, Houston, Port Arthur , Texas, Gulf, Louisiana, Beaumont , Texas, Mississippi , Louisiana, Texas, Bayou, Port Arthur
Fossil fuels are the main driver of the human-caused climate crisis, and science shows deep, sustained reductions to emissions are required this decade. In an annual update on its energy transition strategy on Thursday, Shell said it will target a 15-20% reduction in net carbon intensity of its energy products by 2030 compared with 2016 intensity levels. Measuring emissions by intensity means a company can technically increase its fossil fuel output and overall emissions while using offsets or adding renewable energy or biofuels to its product mix. The company retired a previous target to reduce its carbon intensity by 45% by 2035. Shell also maintained its target to halve emissions from its own operations, known as Scope 1 and 2 emissions, by 2030, saying it had already achieved more than 60% of that target.
Persons: Shell, Wael Sawan’s, , , Backtrack, Mark van Baal, ” Shell Organizations: CNN Locations: , Paris, Singapore, Germany
So far, Woods' plans have turned investors demanding an energy transition strategy into believers - at least on climate. At the same time, the company plans to have a leading role in the vehicle electrification business. Reuters GraphicsMORE OIL VS GREEN AMBITIONExxon's ambitious agenda includes starting up the world's largest hydrogen power plant by 2027. RISKY BUSINESSThe $17 billion budget for low carbon technologies as the company's total revenue grows next year "will continue to rise", the CEO said. Spending in low carbon currently is constrained by scarcity of customers willing to sign up for contracts and insufficient regulations, Woods said.
Persons: Darren Woods, Carlos Barria, Woods, , Paul Sankey, Sankey, Chris James, Dan Ammann, Goldman Sachs, Neil Mehta, Ammann, Brian Weeks, Chris Bohn, Sabrina Valle, Richard Valdmanis, Gary McWilliams, Anna Driver Organizations: ExxonMobil, Economic Cooperation, REUTERS, Exxon Mobil, Natural Resources, Chevron, Reuters, Exxon, Sankey Research, Carbon Solutions, Thomson Locations: Asia, San Francisco , California, U.S, United States, Sankey, Americas, Brazil, Guyana, Texas, Gulf of Mexico, Houston, Dubai
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExxon Mobil CEO Darren Woods discusses low-carbon solutions at COP28Exxon Mobil CEO Darren Woods discusses low-carbon solutions and the "evolving landscape" of new technologies to achieve the green transition at COP28.
Persons: Darren Woods Organizations: Exxon Mobil
Biden sought to kickstart SAF production with a $1.25 per gallon production tax credit in the IRA. To be eligible for the credit, SAF producers must demonstrate their fuel is 50% lower in emissions than conventional jet fuel. The DOE spokesperson confirmed that ethanol producers must cut emissions of they want a long-term role in SAF production. Still, ethanol producers need carbon pipelines because many ethanol plants are not near geologically appropriate underground storage sites. Other options for reducing ethanol's carbon intensity include using renewable energy at ethanol plants, or climate-friendly farming practices for corn.
Persons: Tom Mihalek, Valero, Joe Biden's, Homer Bhullar, Biden, MARK, Barry Glickman, Nikita Pavlenko, Pavlenko, Leah Douglas, Laura Sanicola, David Gregorio Our Organizations: Eco Energy, REUTERS, Rights, SAF, U.S, Carbon Solutions, Valero Energy, U.S . Department of Energy, DOE, Honeywell, Biofuels, Growth Energy, Navigator, CCS, International Council, Clean Transportation, Thomson Locations: Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, U.S, Omaha, Iowa, Denver, Maine, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wolf's, Illinois
Exxon Mobil said on Monday that it planned to set up a facility in Arkansas to produce lithium, a critical raw material for electric vehicles, which pose one of the biggest challenges to the company’s oil business. It could also open the door for southern Arkansas to emerge as a major source of lithium. Most of the metal today comes from Australia and South America and much of it is processed in China. “Electrification is going to be a major component of the energy transition and we bring highly relevant experience to the production of lithium,” Dan Ammann, president of Exxon Mobil Low Carbon Solutions and a former top executive at General Motors, said in an interview. “We see an opportunity to deploy that will be highly profitable.”
Persons: Dan Ammann, Organizations: Exxon Mobil, Exxon, Natural Resources, Carbon Solutions, General Motors Locations: Arkansas, Australia, South America, China,
Exxon Mobil aims to become a leading producer of lithium for electric vehicle batteries through a drilling operation the oil giant is launching in Arkansas, the company announced Monday. Discussions with potential customers such as electric vehicle and battery manufacturers are ongoing, Exxon said in a statement. The lithium operation comes as the major oil companies are under pressure to address climate change. Exxon views lithium as a decadeslong investment with high growth potential as the U.S. shifts to electric vehicles, Ammann said. The U.S currently has just one commercial-scale lithium production operation, in Nevada.
Persons: Dan Ammann, Ammann, " Ammann, CNBC's Organizations: Exxon Mobil, Exxon, Shell, BP, CNBC, . Geological Survey, U.S, Li, Department of Energy, Electric, Cox Automotive Locations: Arkansas, U.S, Argentina, Chile, Nevada
Watch CNBC's full interview with Exxon Mobil's Dan Ammann
  + stars: | 2023-11-13 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with Exxon Mobil's Dan AmmannDan Ammann, president of Exxon’s low carbon solutions business, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss their company's plans to produce lithium for electric vehicle batteries and more.
Persons: Exxon Mobil's Dan Ammann Dan Ammann Organizations: Exxon Mobil's
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExxon Mobil plans to produce lithium for electric vehicle batteriesDan Ammann, president of Exxon’s low carbon solutions business, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss their company's plans to produce lithium for electric vehicle batteries and more.
Persons: Dan Ammann Organizations: Exxon Mobil
Shell’s shrinking green pledge risks backfiring
  + stars: | 2023-11-02 | by ( Yawen Chen | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
REUTERS/Callaghan O’Hare Acquire Licensing RightsSINGAPORE, Nov 2 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Shell (SHEL.L) CEO Wael Sawan has upped the UK group’s quarterly buyback plan while cutting back on unprofitable low-carbon activities. His pivot back into fossil fuels has shielded the $217 billion company from the wind energy troubles now ensnaring European peer BP (BP.L) and renewables giant Orsted (ORSTED.CO). But the strategy can work only as long as volatile energy prices stay high. Shell’s $6.2 billion third-quarter adjusted net profit shrunk by a third from a year earlier but came in line with analysts’ expectations. So far this year, the total return for Shell’s shareholders has hit 17%, above rivals like BP and TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA).
Persons: Wael Sawan, Daniel Yergin, Callaghan O’Hare, Sawan, Shell, pare, Lisa Jucca, Streisand Neto Organizations: Shell, P Global, REUTERS, Rights, Reuters, BP, EV, Nature Energy, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Carbon Solutions, Renewables, Energy Solutions, Thomson Locations: Houston , Texas, U.S, Rights SINGAPORE
The others will use a combination of renewables, nuclear power, and natural gas with carbon capture and storage. Putting federal money behind a program to fight climate change while using natural gas, a fossil fuel, as one of its main ingredients may not seem intuitive. To wit, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, where the funding for the hydrogen hubs comes from, specifically required that two of the selected hydrogen hubs be located in natural gas-rich regions. Making hydrogen from natural gas with carbon capture will require additional energy and be more expensive than producing hydrogen from natural gas where the excess carbon emissions just spew into the atmosphere. That is what the U.S. government is trying to change with its hydrogen hubs program and the production tax credit.
Persons: Joe Biden, Elizabeth Flores, Jennifer Granholm, Rachel Fakhry, Fakhry, Jonathan Ernst, Kent, Sean Heinroth, Young's, That's, Heinroth, Tom Oakland, Wisconsin —, They've, Alex Kizer, Kizer Organizations: Cummins, Star Tribune, Getty, Swiss Army, U.S . Department of the Energy, Natural Resources Defense, Energy, Department of Energy, CNBC, Reuters, Infrastructure Law, Ernst, of Energy, North Dakota Department of Commerce, Oakland, EFI Foundation, U.S, Treasury Department Locations: America, Fridley, Minn, United States, U.S, Tioga, Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, Houston, Montana , North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Washington
A model of an equipment is displayed by energy services firm Baker Hughes during the LNG 2023 energy trade show in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, July 12, 2023. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 25 (Reuters) - U.S. oilfield technology firm Baker Hughes (BKR.O) joined rivals SLB (SLB.N) and Halliburton (HAL.N) in posting upbeat quarterly profit on Wednesday, driven by strong demand for its services and equipment in international markets. The move has benefited companies such as Baker Hughes, which provides services including drilling, well construction and completion. U.S. oil and natural gas prices have scaled back from the year-ago quarter's peak and dented some demand in North America. Baker Hughes also received contracts from several liquefied natural gas projects, as energy firms rush to build new LNG-producing facilities.
Persons: Baker Hughes, Chris Helgren, Lorenzo Simonelli, Sourasis Bose, Shailesh Kuber Organizations: REUTERS, SLB, Halliburton, Energy, Revenue, & Energy Technology, Thomson Locations: Vancouver , British Columbia, Canada, North America, U.S, Bengaluru
SummaryCompanies Shell to cut 200 jobs, or 15%, of low-carbon solutions unitA further 130 jobs under reviewShell scraps hydrogen light mobility unitLONDON, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Shell (SHEL.L) will cut around 15% of the workforce at its low-carbon solutions division and scale back its hydrogen business as part of CEO Wael Sawan's drive to boost profits, it said on Wednesday. Shell plans to sharply scale back its hydrogen light mobility operations, which develop technologies for light passenger vehicles, the company said. It will also merge two of four general manager roles in the hydrogen business, Shell said. The retreat from the light mobility sector follows the departure of the business's manager Oliver Bishop several months ago. Bishop today leads rival BP's (BP.L) global hydrogen mobility business.
Persons: Wael Sawan's, Sawan, Shell, Oliver Bishop, BP's, London . Sawan, Ron Bousso, Jason Neely, Jan Harvey Organizations: Shell, Reuters, Solutions, Sawan, Energy Intelligence, BP, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Thomson Locations: Shell, Britain, Netherlands, Europe's, Louisiana, London ., U.S
Shell will cut 200 jobs in clean energy division
  + stars: | 2023-10-25 | by ( Rebecca Picciotto | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Shell will cut 200 positions within its low-carbon solutions unit in 2024, a spokesperson confirmed to CNBC on Wednesday. The company's low-carbon division helps spearhead Shell's transition to clean energy including hydrogen, given its pledge to become a "net-zero emissions energy business" by 2050. In the meantime, according to the spokesperson, Shell is planning $10-15 billion of low-carbon energy investment over the next two years, which will include biofuels, hydrogen, carbon capture and electric vehicle charging. Last July, the company announced its investment in the creation of one of Europe's largest hydrogen energy plants. The question of how Big Oil companies like Shell can fit into a clean energy future is existential for its business.
Persons: Wael Sawan, downsize, Shell, Sawan Organizations: Shell, CNBC, Department of Energy, Big Oil, Exxon Mobil, Chevron Locations: Shell's, bullish, Louisiana, Paris, California
Navigator CO2 Ventures has canceled its Heartland Greenway pipeline project aimed at capturing 15 million metric tons of carbon dioxide annually from Midwest ethanol plants and storing it permanently underground, the company said on Friday, citing "unpredictable" state regulatory processes. The Navigator project would have laid 1,300 miles (2,092 km) of pipeline across five states. Residents along the route expressed concern to state regulators about potential safety risks if the pipeline should leak and about harm to their land from construction. In September, the company's permit application was denied by South Dakota regulators and this month the company asked Iowa regulators to pause its permit process. Another major CCS pipeline project proposed by Summit Carbon Solutions has also faced setbacks amid landowner concerns, including permit denials in South and North Dakota.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Jess Mazour Organizations: Ventures, Heartland, South, Navigator, Sierra Club, CCS, Summit Carbon Solutions, Summit Locations: Gowrie , Iowa, U.S, Midwest, South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, Iowa , Nebraska, South, North Dakota
It is also a blow to the ethanol industry, which sees CCS as key to cutting emissions from producing the fuel. The Navigator project would have laid 1,300 miles (2,092 km) of pipeline across five states. Residents along the route expressed concern to state regulators about potential safety risks if the pipeline should leak and about harm to their land from construction. Another major CCS pipeline project proposed by Summit Carbon Solutions has also faced setbacks amid landowner concerns, including permit denials in South and North Dakota. Summit recently said its pipeline will start operating in 2026, a delay from its initial timeline of 2024.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Jess Mazour, Leah Douglas, Richard Chang, Rod Nickel Organizations: Ventures, Heartland, South, Navigator, Sierra Club, CCS, Summit Carbon Solutions, Summit, Thomson Locations: Windsor , Colorado, Midwest, U.S, South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, Iowa , Nebraska, South, North Dakota
DUBAI, Oct 9 (Reuters) - The United Arab Emirates is refashioning state-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) in the image of an international oil major by stepping up its global expansion and finding new revenue streams to maximise earnings for the Gulf state. The state-owned company also told Reuters it was investing in energy trading, without giving further details. ADNOC has two trading arms, both set up in 2020: ADNOC Trading, which is focused on crude oil, and ADNOC Global Trading, a joint venture with Italy's Eni (ENI.MI) and OMV which is more focused on refined products. Other recent hires include Bart Cornelissen, who left Deloitte to become ADNOC's senior vice president for group strategy and portfolio last month, according to LinkedIn. Recent senior hires for ADNOC's trading arms include alumni of Gunvor, Litasco, Shell and TotalEnergies, the employment network showed.
Persons: ADNOC, Galp, Austria's, Mohammed bin Zayed, headcount, Michele Fiorentino, Baker Hughes, Musabbeh Al Kaabi, Al Kaabi, Bart Cornelissen, Michael Hafner, Hafner, Morgan Stanley, Neil Quilliam, Sultan al, Jaber, John Kerry, Abu, Maha El Dahan, Yousef Saba, Ron Bousso, David Clarke Organizations: United, Abu, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, Reuters, BP, NewMed Energy, Italy's Eni, UAE, IOC, Aramco, LinkedIn, Mubadala Energy, Deloitte, Greenhill &, Deutsche Bank, UBS, HSBC, Shell, Eni, Gunvor, The, Chatham House, United Nations, Masdar, Thomson Locations: DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi, Gulf, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Africa, Mozambique, ADNOC, Geneva, London, The UAE, Europe, Sultan, Dubai
"For a long time, it has been Shell's ambition to be a leader in the energy transition. It is the reason we work here," said the letter which was addressed to Sawan and the Shell executive committee. "We might not always agree on the way forward, but I feel good about the role Shell is, and will continue, to play. A Shell spokesperson said: "We appreciate that our staff are engaged in and have passion for both the energy transition and Shell... Several senior Shell executives have left the low-carbon and renewables division since the strategy change.
Persons: Wael Sawan, Sawan, Thomas Brostrom, Shell, Lisette de Heiden, Wouter Drinkwaard, De Heiden, Drinkwaard, Oliver Bishop, Roberto Jimenez, Colin Crooks, Ron Bousso, Sharon Singleton Organizations: Reuters, Shell, CMD, BP, Thomson Locations: Shell's, Sawan, Ireland, France, India, Europe
Direct air capture involves extracting carbon directly from the atmosphere. The technology could be developed on the back of Exxon's carbon capture and storage (CCS) business which will also involve trapping emissions underground, Crocker said. Exxon last year extended a joint research agreement with DAC developer Global Thermostat, intended to accelerate development of the technology for full-scale deployment. DAC "would link very closely to our CCS business where we are going to have large geologic storage and the capability to capture CO2," Crocker said. Limiting its own emissions and CCS take up the majority of the $17 billion allocated for Exxon's Low Carbon business through 2022-2027.
Persons: Sergio Moraes, Matthew Crocker, Crocker, Sabrina Valle, David Gregorio Our Organizations: Exxon Mobil Corp, Oil, Gas Expo, REUTERS, Rights, Exxon, United Nations, Global, Occidental, CCS, Exxon's, Deloitte, Thomson Locations: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Rights CALGARY , Alberta, Houston
In the week ended Sept. 12, money managers expanded their net short position in CBOT corn futures and options to 134,909 contracts from 93,913 a week earlier. That marked funds’ most bearish corn stance since mid-August 2020, when CBOT corn was trading below $3.50 per bushel. Most-active corn futures have traded below $5 since Aug. 21, and they fell 2% in the week ended Sept. 12. Managed money net position in CBOT corn futures and optionsCorn dropped to $4.73-1/2 per bushel on Sept. 12, tying mid-August for the lowest price since December 2020. Most-active CBOT wheat shed 2% in the week ended Sept. 12, dropping to the lowest price since December 2020.
Persons: Lucas Jackson, Corn, Bean, soyoil, Karen Braun, Diane Craft Organizations: Carbon Solutions, REUTERS, Rights, U.S . Department, Agriculture, Futures, Funds, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Defiance, Shelby County , Iowa, Rights NAPERVILLE , Illinois, Chicago, U.S, soymeal, Ukraine, Russia
South Dakota regulators on Monday rejected a permit application for a proposed carbon dioxide pipeline through the state, dealing a fresh setback to the company behind the multistate project after North Dakota refused a siting permit for another leg there. The decision complicates an already complex process for Summit Carbon Solutions as it seeks similar authorization in other states amid opposition from landowners and environmental groups. Political Cartoons View All 1152 ImagesThe South Dakota panel's vote came on a motion made Friday by commission staff. They said Summit's proposed route would violate county ordinances involving setback distances. North Dakota regulators last month denied Summit a siting permit for its 320-mile (515-kilometer) proposed route through the state.
Persons: Summit, Summit's, Kristen Edwards, Brett Koenecke, Gary Hanson, ” Hanson, Lee Blank, Koenecke, Brian Jorde, Organizations: North Dakota, South Dakota Public Utilities Commission, Carbon Solutions, , Summit, Iowa Utilities Board, Public Service Commission Locations: Dakota, North, Iowa , Minnesota , Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, , Omaha, . Minnesota, Minnesota, Fergus Falls
In 2021, the clothing brand teamed up with the carbon-accounting startup Watershed to track carbon emissions, mostly from Everlane's supply chain, using data collection. Everlane is one of several companies using carbon-accounting startups to track emissions and put a dollar amount on their carbon footprints. Investment by venture-capital firms in carbon-accounting startups surged from $60 million in 2020 to $767 million in 2022, according to PitchBook. But it's challenging to precisely monitor this since companies' emissions are not the same, and they often overlap. The startup works with small, midsize, and enterprise companies, including Virgin Atlantic.
Persons: Everlane, Katina, Maria Fujihara, Fujihara, Amelia Penniman, Benchimol, Lauren Gifford, Gifford, DoorDash, Michael Thornton, Thornton Organizations: Service, Fortune Business, Sinai Technologies, Bayer, Siemens, SINAI Technologies, Investment, BlackRock, Walmart, Greenhouse Gas Management Institute, US Environmental Protection Agency, International Energy Agency, Carbon Analytics, Greenhouse, Greenhouse Gas Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, Carbon Solutions, Colorado State University, Virgin Atlantic Locations: Sequoia, Airbnb, Sinai
South Dakota regulators on Wednesday denied a construction permit for a carbon dioxide pipeline project, one month after a North Dakota panel did the same to a similar project by another company. The South Dakota Public Utilities Commission voted unanimously to deny Navigator's application for its Heartland Greenway pipeline. The proposed South Dakota route encompassed 112 miles (180 kilometers) and would serve three ethanol plants. Other states continue to weigh Summit's project, which would encompass a 2,000-mile network from 30-some ethanol plants throughout Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota to an underground storage site in North Dakota. Summit this week withdrew its applications to Oliver County for two permits related to construction of injection wells for its underground CO2 storage site in central North Dakota.
Persons: Kristie Fiegen, Brian Jorde, It's, Oliver, Jaden Schmidt, Sabrina Ahmed Zenor, Oliver County's Organizations: The South Dakota Public Utilities Commission, Summit Carbon Solutions, Navigator, The Iowa Utilities Board, Dakota's Public Service Commission Locations: Dakota, Illinois , Iowa, Minnesota , Nebraska, South Dakota, Illinois, The, Heartland, Iowa, Midwest, Iowa , Minnesota , Nebraska, North Dakota, Oliver County, Summit, Oliver
UAE oil giant ADNOC — run by the president of the COP28 climate conference — is expected to spend more than $1 billion every month this decade on fossil fuels, according to new analysis by international NGO Global Witness. It comes ahead of the COP28 climate summit, with Dubai set to host the U.N.'s annual conference from Nov. 30 through to Dec. 12. The person overseeing the talks, Sultan al-Jaber, is chief executive of ADNOC (the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company) — one of the world's largest oil and gas firms. His position as both COP28 president and ADNOC CEO caused dismay among civil society groups and U.S. and EU lawmakers, although several government ministers have since defended his appointment. It means that ADNOC is forecast to spend nearly seven times more on fossil fuels through to 2030 than it does on "low-carbon solution" projects.
Persons: Sultan Al Jaber, Sultan al, Jaber Organizations: Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, UAE, Global, ADNOC, CNBC Locations: Abu Dhabi, Brussels, Dubai, Paris
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